Bash command line arguments passed to sed via ssh

2020-07-30 02:55发布

问题:

I am looking to write a simple script to perform a SSH command on many hosts simultaneously, and which hosts exactly are generated from another script. The problem is that when I run the script using sometihng like sed it doesn't work properly.

It should run like sshall.sh {anything here} and it will run the {anything here} part on all the nodes in the list.

sshall.sh

#!/bin/bash

NODES=`listNodes | grep "node-[0-9*]" -o`

echo "Connecting to all nodes and running: ${@:1}"

for i in $NODES
do
   :
        echo "$i : Begin"
        echo "----------------------------------------"

        ssh -q -o "StrictHostKeyChecking no"  $i "${@:1}"

        echo "----------------------------------------"
        echo "$i : Complete";
        echo ""
done

When it is run with something like whoami it works but when I run:

[root@myhost bin]# sshall.sh sed -i '/^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/' /etc/myconfig.conf
Connecting to all nodes and running: sed -i /^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/ /etc/myconfig.conf

node-1 : Begin
----------------------------------------
sed: -e expression #1, char 18: missing command
----------------------------------------
node-1 : Complete

node-2 : Begin
----------------------------------------
sed: -e expression #1, char 18: missing command
----------------------------------------
node-2 : Complete

…

Notice that the quotes disappear on the sed command when sent to the remote client.

  1. How do I go about fixing my bash command?
  2. Is there a better way of achieving this?

回答1:

Substitute an eval-safe quoted version of your command into a heredoc:

#!/bin/bash
#      ^^^^- not /bin/sh; printf %q is an extension

# Put your command into a single string, with each argument quoted to be eval-safe
printf -v cmd_q '%q ' "$@"

while IFS= read -r hostname; do
  # run bash -s remotely, with that string passed on stdin
  ssh -q -o 'StrictHostKeyChecking no' "$hostname" "bash -s" <<EOF
$cmd_q
EOF
done < <(listNodes | grep -o -e "node-[0-9*]")

Why this works reliably (and other approaches don't):

  • printf %q knows how to quote contents to be eval'd by that same shell (so spaces, wildcards, various local quoting methods, etc. will always be supported).
  • Arguments given to ssh are not passed to the remote command individually! Instead, they're concatenated into a string passed to sh -c.
  • However: The output of printf %q is not portable to all POSIX-derived shells! It's guaranteed to be compatible with the same shell locally in use -- ksh will always parse output from printf '%q' in ksh, bash will parse output from printf '%q' in bash, etc; thus, you can't safely pass this string on the remote argument vector, because it's /bin/sh -- not bash -- running there. (If you know your remote /bin/sh is provided by bash, then you can run ssh "$hostname" "$cmd_q" safely, but only under this condition).
  • bash -s reads the script to run from stdin, meaning that passing your command there -- not on the argument vector -- ensures that it'll be parsed into arguments by the same shell that escaped it to be shell-safe.


回答2:

You want to pass the entire command -- with all of its arguments, spaces, and quotation marks -- to ssh so it can pass it unchanged to the remote shell for parsing.

One way to do that is to put it all inside single quotation marks. But then you'll also need to make sure the single quotation marks within your command are preserved in the arguments, so the remote shell builds the correct arguments for sed.

sshall.sh 'sed -i '"'"'/^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/'"'"' /etc/myconfig.conf'

It looks redundant, but '"'"' is a common Bourne trick to get a single quotation mark into a single-quoted string. The first quote ends single-quoting temporarily, the double-quote-single-quote-double-quote construct appends a single quotation mark, and then the single quotation mark resumes your single-quoted section. So to speak.

Another trick that can be helpful for troubleshooting is to add the -v flag do your ssh flags, which will spit out lots of text, but most importantly it will show you exactly what string it's passing to the remote shell for parsing and execution.

--

All of this is fairly fragile around spaces in your arguments, which you'll need to avoid, since you're relying on shell parsing on the opposite end.



回答3:

Thinking outside the box: instead of dealing with all the quoting issues and the word-splitting in the wrong places, you could attempt to a) construct the script locally (maybe use a here-document?), b) scp the script to the remote end, then c) invoke it there. This easily allows more complex command sequences, with all the power of shell control constructs etc. Debugging (checking proper quoting) would be a breeze by simply looking at the generated script.



回答4:

I recommend reading the command(s) from the standard input rather than from the command line arguments:

cmd.sh

#!/bin/bash -
# Load server_list with user@host "words" here.

cmd=$(</dev/stdin)

for h in ${server_list[*]}; do
    ssh "$h" "$cmd"
done

Usage:

./cmd.sh <<'CMD'
sed -i '/^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/' /path/to/file1
# other commands
# here...
CMD

Alternatively, run ./cmd.sh, type the command(s), then press Ctrl-D.

I find the latter variant the most convenient, as you don't even need for here documents, no need for extra escaping. Just invoke your script, type the commands, and press the shortcut. What could be easier?

Explanations

The problem with your approach is that the quotes are stripped from the arguments by the shell. For example, the argument '/^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/' will be interpreted as /^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/ string (without the single quotes), which is an invalid argument for sed.

Of course, you can escape the command with the built-in printf as suggested in other answer here. But the command becomes not very readable after escaping. For example

printf %q 'sed -i /^somebeginning/ s/$/,appendme/ /home/ruslan/tmp/file1.txt'

produces

sed\ -i\ /\^somebeginning/\ s/\$/\,appendme/\ /home/ruslan/tmp/file1.txt

which is not very readable, and will look ugly, if you print it to the screen in order to show the progress.

That's why I prefer to read from the standard input and leave the command intact. My script prints the command strings to the screen, and I see them just in the form I have written them.


Note, the for .. in loop iterates $IFS-separated "words", and is generally not preferred way to traverse an array. It is generally better to invoke read -r in a while loop with adjusted $IFS. I have used the for loop for simplicity, as the question is really about invoking the ssh command.



回答5:

Logging into multiple systems over SSH and using the same (or variations on the same) command is the basic use case behind ansible. The system is not without significant flaws, but for simple use cases is pretty great. If you want a more solid solution without too much faffing about with escaping and looping over hosts, take a look.

Ansible has a 'raw' module which doesn't even require any dependencies on the target hosts, and you might find that a very simple way to achieve this sort of functionality in a way that frees you from the considerations of looping over hosts, handling errors, marshalling the commands, etc and lets you focus on what you're actually trying to achieve.